Penn State
Credit: Penn State University |
A new, high-pressure technique may allow the production of huge
sheets of thin-film silicon semiconductors at low temperatures in simple
reactors at a fraction of the size and cost of current technology.
A paper describing the research by scientists at Penn State
University was published on May 13, 2016, in the journal Advanced Materials.
"We
have developed a new, high-pressure, plasma-free approach to creating
large-area, thin-film semiconductors," said John Badding, professor of
chemistry, physics, and materials science and engineering at Penn State and the
leader of the research team.
"By putting the process under high pressure, our new
technique could make it less expensive and easier to create the large, flexible
semiconductors that are used in flat-panel monitors and solar cells and are the
second most commercially important semiconductors."
To create a functioning semiconductor, the chemical reaction
that deposits the silicon onto the surface must happen at a low enough
temperature so that the hydrogen atoms are incorporated into the coating rather
than being driven off like steam from boiling water.
With current technology, this low temperature is achieved by
creating plasma -- a state of matter similar to a gas made up of ions and free
electrons -- in a large volume of gas at low pressure.
Massive and expensive reactors so large that they are difficult
to ship by air are needed to generate the plasma and to accommodate the large
volume of gas required.
"With
our new high-pressure chemistry technique, we can create low-temperature
reactions in much smaller spaces and with a much smaller volume of gas,"
said Badding.
"The reduced space necessary allows us, for the first time,
to create semiconductors on multiple, stacked surfaces simultaneously, rather
than on just a single surface. To maximize the surface area, rolled-up flexible
surfaces can be used in a very simple and far more compact reactor. The area of
the resulting rolled-up semiconducting material could, upon further
development, approach or even exceed a
square kilometer."